Top Challenges to Widespread 3D Printing Adoption

You often hear about the benefits of 3D printing: design freedom, part consolidation, no tooling required, just-in-time inventory, etc. To today’s engineer, the list of technical advantages is endless. With all of these benefits you would think 3D printing would be as common as the internet by now, but that’s not the case. Companies are still struggling to find ways to incorporate the technology into their product development and manufacturing operations. According to the 2014 Wohlers Report, additive manufacturing is still less than 2% of the entire manufacturing market. So what challenges are holding additive manufacturing back from widespread adoption? We set out to find the answer through our recent industry survey of 700 serious, professional users.

We wanted to uncover what professional users of 3D printing perceive as the top challenges their company faces in using AM now and will face in the future.

We asked the following questions:

Which of the following challenges do you see your company facing for using additive manufacturing today?

Which of the following challenges do you see your company facing for using additive manufacturing in the next three years?

We presented the biggest challenges we’ve heard over the years and throughout the industry in our pick list, including:

Equipment costs

Limited materials available

Post-processing requirements

Manufacturing costs

Lack of in-house additive manufacturing resources

Lack of expertise and/or training among workforce/employees

Limited repeatability (accuracy from build to build)

Lack of formal standards

Lack of proven documentation of additive manufacturing’s capabilities

Software development and capabilities

Longer production timelines

Limited recyclability

Risk of litigation/legal implication

Data storage requirements

Other

The results may or may not seem surprising. As noted in figure C, two of the top four challenges are financially-based, indicating cost remains a notable barrier to implementation. But we were surprised that lack of software and legal implications didn’t rise to the top as they have been hot topics throughout the media in the last year.

In order to overcome these challenges, we believe the industry must change the conversation from emphasizing additive manufacturing’s technical benefits to overall business value. Companies need to not only identify applications and parts to build with 3D printing, but look at their manufacturing strategy as a whole to see how the technology can enable innovation and add value to overall operations. Instead of finding products that fit the technology, make the technology fit the product and business model. Think about the business drivers, such as:

Download our full survey report to see what steps companies are already taking to combat these challenges and prepare for implementing additive manufacturing in the future. If your company is a committed user of 3D printing, these findings will also provide assurance you are headed down a similar path of your peers and face many of the same challenges to adoption. If you’re not there yet, the results may serve as a wake-up call to take action because companies who don’t initiate investment soon will quickly be at a disadvantage.

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